As a dancer, I always enjoy it when the caller modifies to make a dance 
end with a partner swing, but as a caller I think it might get boring if 
I did that every time. It's the surprise element that appeals to the 
dancers. When I'm choosing dances for the evening I usually try to make 
the last dance one that naturally ends with a partner swing. And if the 
dance I'm calling is very high energy (down the halls, for example) and 
is going well, sometimes modifying to end with a partner swing just adds 
to the excitement.
I agree with Greg about contras being very predictable, that's why 
contra dancing seems to attract people that would ordinarily never even 
think of setting foot on a dance floor (in my dance community we call 
this the "engineer effect", because of the surprisingly high percentage 
of male dancers who come from the fields of science and engineering.) 
-Lewis Land
On 1/4/2012 12:11 AM, Greg McKenzie wrote:
  I'm assuming this discussion is about contra
dances?
 If there are folks who are "bored" with the "utter predictability" of
a
 partner swing at the end of a dance then I am perplexed as to what the heck
 they are doing at a contra dance in the first place.  Why not swing,
 squares, or just about any other social dance?  Contras are about as
 predictable as any dance form gets so I pretty much assume that folks in
 the hall enjoy the predictability.  It gives them a sense of control and a
 feeling that they "know the drill" and are on an "inside track."  If
you
 want to get them on your side then why not give the regulars whatever cues
 will help them to feel like a part of the action.
 I try to fit a swing in at the end of the dance.  I like to make the ending
 as clear as possible, for myself, the dancers, and for the musicians.  I
 find that the musicians adapt quite easily to this sort of thing and most
 appreciate multiple, clear cues that the dance is ending.
 - Greg McKenzie
 ************
 On Tue, Jan 3, 2012 at 6:00 PM, Alan Winston - SSRL Central Computing<
 winston(a)slac.stanford.edu>  wrote:
  Callers --
 Looking for opinions.
 As a caller, I will usually alter (if necessary), the last dance of a
 medley,
 the last dance of the first half, or the last dance of evening to end with
 a
 partner swing if it doesn't work that way in the choreography.  (You know,
 that
 "This time, circle half and swing your partner" or "This time, just keep
on
 swinging!" thing.)
 I'll usually leave the other dances alone.  They end how they end; the band
 gets to crescendo and I don't have to be heard, and the dancers get
 something
 other than utter predictability.
 (As a dancer I don't like utter predictability; I begin to get a teeny bit
 bored if the callers changes every dance to end with a partner swing.)
 But I mentioned this to my date, and she *loves* it when the caller
 changes the
 dance to make it a partner swing so that it feels like you're finishing
 with
 the partner who asked you, and feels disappointed if the caller doesn't
 make
 those changes.  I mentioned the issue of stepping on the band's hot
 ending; as
 a dancer, that meant nothing to her.
 So what do y'all think?  What do you do?  How you do think people like it?
 (Nobody's ever complained to me that I didn't alter endings enough, and I
 doubt that's the kind of thing anybody complains to anybody about, but it
 probably has some impact on dancers enjoyment of the evening.)
 Thanks!
 -- Alan
 --
 ===============================================================================
   Alan Winston --- WINSTON(a)SSRL.SLAC.STANFORD.EDU
   Disclaimer: I speak only for myself, not SLAC or SSRL   Phone:
 650/926-3056
   Paper mail to: SSRL -- SLAC BIN 99, 2575 Sand Hill Rd, Menlo Park CA
 94025
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